Francis I don't mean to be patronizing or dismissive, but just a good
fellow vinyl collector: what I'm going to say is something which I have
often needed reminding of too...

When was the last time you checked your tracking? (Correct weight per
cartridge as indicated on the packaging or on their website + correct
tone arm alignment for your 1210s (I'm guessing, but whatever turntables
you have...)

I'm not saying that you haven't come across some particularly
'problematic' pressings recently, it's just that incorrectly set up
tables will exacerbate such problems to the point that they're
noticeable, whereas well set-up ones a likely to play those records OK.
You might notice some errors if you're a golden-eared audiophile, but
there wouldn't be any skipping...

Just a thought, don't shoot!

;-)

Ken

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 24 July 2007 12:26
To: 313@hyperreal.org
Subject: (313) badly cut records

I seem to be suffering a rash of records which I (and I could be getting
this wrong, I'm sure someone will sort it if I have) would
described as badly cut.
Some people would say they're bad pressings but it seems to me the
fault's not in the manufacturing process but in the mastering and
cutting stage.  And although I guess you could master them differently
(e.g. to have less bass) you could also say you should get
the sound right at the mastering then adjust the overall gain / signal
strength (whatever) while cutting so the grooves can cope (=
your stylus can cope with the resulting groove)?  I don't think it's so
much a problem of not enough space between the grooves as
what happens on my decks (and on the deck in my local shop which has the
weight set a bit heavier than I do) is that the needle gets
launched right out of the groove and skips a mm or two (i.e. greater
than the gap to the next groove even at a wide spacing).

Recent culprits that I can recall right now:

Sutekh : Notes From Dr. Island on Souljazz, one side of this judders
(i.e. the arm judders while playing it) away but is just about
playable.

Samurai Champloo : Way Of The Samurai 3xLP, expensive triple pack from
Japan, I bought it as, while I could pass on some of it, I
REALLY like about 1 track per vinyl, fortunately track A2 is not one of
these as it's unplayable.

Deepchord : The Coldest Season Pt.2 on Modern Love, again the A side of
this is (for me anyway) unplayable.  Unlike the one above
it's the track I particularly like that I can't play so I just had to
take it back to the shop (I think I'm liking Pt.3 of this
series best anyway).

What I can't understand is how the problems aren't noticed during the
mastering / cutting process, if you see features on this (e.g.
the one on D&M on my Berlin Digital DVD or there's one on one of those
Slices DVDs) they're incredibly careful, trying the test
pressing numerous times etc.  OK D&M are amongst the best but surely
nobody just "goes for it", turns out a faulty product and the
label just accepts it?

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